Graffiti on the upswing
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- It happened again Saturday.
Ernie Feeney woke up, looked across the street and saw it --
2-foot-high letters spray-painted on the fences at Paularino Elementary
School.
Her husband, John, said such graffiti has again become a common sight
in his Mesa North neighborhood.
“My real feeling is the city does an excellent job cleaning up
graffiti but a lousy job preventing graffiti,” he said. “I have no
enthusiasm for calling just to get it painted over. I want it stopped at
its source. Some people in the city try to downplay it, saying it’s just
‘tagging,’ but this is gang graffiti. It yells at people that we have
gang members in the neighborhood, and who wants to live in a neighborhood
with gang members?”
Dale Birney, spokesman for the Costa Mesa Police Department, said
graffiti occurs in inconsistent cycles.
“Sometimes we go for a while without having any, other times we seem
to find new signs every day,” he said, adding that there have been many
incidents lately.
John Feeney, who is part of the Mesa North Crime Prevention Committee,
said graffiti is back on the upswing of its cycle, after dropping for a
few months after May, when the City Council upped the reward from $500 to
$2,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of graffiti
artists.
But convictions are elusive, and nobody has yet collected the $2,000
reward.
Two people last year were paid after information they reported led to
convictions, and one person in 1999 received a reward.
But the last reward was earned before the ante was raised, although
the $500 wasn’t distributed until a conviction in June.
Birney said arrests and convictions for graffiti are difficult because
people involved choose locations and times when they are unlikely to be
seen.
“They are not doing it to be seen while they are doing it, they are
doing it to convey a message or to stake out boundaries or whatever,” he
said. “This type of crime is much more difficult to get a conviction on
if we don’t have eyewitness accounts.”
Graffiti is a problem because it is unsightly, it damages private
property, and it decreases the beauty of the neighborhood, but residents
could be reluctant to inform the police because they fear retaliation or
just don’t want to get involved, Birney said.
“I would encourage people to let us assist them in maintaining the
integrity of their neighborhood, whether or not they would like to get
involved with the reward program,” he said. “We need as much help as we
can get in this community. The best way to prevent this type of thing
from repeating itself is to bring the people responsible to justice.”
QUESTION
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